BOEMRE Authorizes
Offshore Sand Resources for
Florida Shoreline Restoration
WASHINGTON, DC - The
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE) announced today
that it has
signed a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) authorizing
Miami-Dade County, Fla., to use up to
500,000 cubic yards of sand from the Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) to restore 14 miles of
shoreline eroded by storm waves and tides.
“The bureau’s Marine Minerals Program provides sand
resources from the OCS that help remedy the effects
of erosion and enhance the integrity of our nation’s
shoreline,” said BOEMRE Director Michael R.
Bromwich. “This MOA is an excellent example of
federal agencies working with local communities to
restore and preserve the coastal environment.”
The
Army Corps of Engineers (ACE) will dredge the sand
from a site that lies more than 3
statute miles south of the Port of Miami
entrance channel. The sand will then be
hydraulically pumped onto the Miami-Dade County
shoreline.
Planning for this project began in 2008 and BOEMRE
(then the Minerals Management Service) cooperated
with the ACE in the National Environmental Policy
Act review process. The project is expected to
begin in the fall of 2011.
For more information,
go to:
http://www.boemre.gov/sandandgravel.
Contact: BOEMRE
Public Affairs